After-install integrity check so you could make sure that everything installed properly

HDD space after installation: up to 14 GB

Use “Language Selector.exe” in game root to change the game language

Repack uses pZlib library by Razor12911

Game Description

A tale of emotion versus reason…

In Tales of Berseria, players embark on a journey of self-discovery as they assume the role of Velvet, a young woman whose once kind demeanor has been replaced and overcome with a festering anger and hatred after a traumatic experience three years prior to the events within Tales of Berseria. Velvet will join a crew of pirates as they sail across the sea and visit the many islands that make up the sacred kingdom of Midgand in an all-new adventure developed by the celebrated team behind the Tales of series. Veteran Tales of character designer Mutsumi Inomata has personally designed Velvet and famous Japanese animation studio, ufotable, returns to animate the game’s breathtaking cutscenes; delivering truly epic and emotional storytelling in their unique style.

You can skip downloading of video/audio files you don’t need. Here is the list of such files:

setup-fitgirl-optional-japanese-voiceovers.bin (self-explaning)

setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossless.bin (get either this OR lossy version, you don’t need both)

setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin (get either this OR lossless version, you don’t need both)

In example, if you want to launch the game with Englis UI/Subtitles/Voiceovers and with re-encoded lossy videos – skip all selective/optional files,
but download setup-fitgirl-selective-videos-lossy.bin & all main files (01-03).

Lossless vs Lossy videos

As you know, I don’t like lossy repacking. This particular game is a rare exception. All game videos on PC are rendered in 1080p with 24fps. But actually the displayed framerate for many scenes varies from 7 to 15, which is typical for Japanese animation.

So, for those, who desperatly fights for every GB of traffic, I’ve made an optional lossy versions of those videos. Of course, they look crappy in some scenes compared to original – blocky, poor red color, artefacts on edges. But many people won’t see the difference or will cope with what they get for that small size.

As always, I don’t push you nor I make a choice for you.

Here is the example of re-encoded video, the opening cinematics, transcoded from original BINK2 1080p to BINK1 1080p format with reduced bitrate.

It’s an self-playing executable, so you can simply run and watch it, no codecs or players required.

Watch and decide if you need to spend additional 5 GBs for original videos or re-encoded videos would be enough.